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GWR train fitted with F1 tech for two-month superfast wifi trial

about 5 hours ago
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Train wifi in the UK, long a source of frustration for passengers, is about to get radically faster – for a lucky few at least.A two-month trial has begun on one Great Western Railway (GWR) train, fitted with technology from Formula One that switches between the signals from 5G masts to low Earth-orbit satellites to provide almost seamless, superfast wifi.For now, only one of GWR’s 57 intercity express trains will have a connection good enough to deliver a Netflix series to the seat.However, a successful trial and the promise of lower costs could spell a wider rollout to the rest of the mainline railway by 2030.On a test run from London Paddington to Newbury and back, the Guardian found the wifi fast and reliable enough to video call editors at the office, catch up on old Match of the Days on iPlayer and listen to songs on YouTube at the same time, with only occasional blips and pixelation.

Download speeds reached more than 120 megabytes a second, faster than many homes.Speaking at Paddington at the launch of the trial, the rail minister, Peter Hendy, said: “Passenger experience is top of our agenda – and 21st-century experience ought to be seamless fast wifi … which will make the time spent travelling by train even more valuable.”He said the trial would complement government investment in improving mobile connectivity, with another £41m set aside for train wifi and low-orbit satellite connections, announced in June’s spending review.The Department for Transport is funding work to eliminate mobile signal black spots in rail tunnels and upgrading 5G infrastructure at stations on GWR routes.Lord Hendy said the new state-owned Great British Railways would aspire to fast wifi across the entire railway, but added: “The real question is how quickly and how cheaply it can be rolled out.

”Hendy said it could be “a real productivity benefit for the whole country, hopefully at a modest cost”,He said the department would be awaiting the results of the trial, but its advocates claim the new system could be installed relatively quickly and cheaply without requiring extra infrastructure on the railway,The previous government was considering scrapping free wifi on trains because of the unreliability and cost,Nick Fry, the chair of Motion Applied, a tech company spun out of the McLaren racing division, said the pilot would demonstrate the technology was ready,The UK-made tech, pioneered in F1, combines “several pizza-sized boxes” and antennae attached to the roof of the train, allowing it to connect and switch between the best available network, from wifi to 5G to satellite, he said.

“It’s very fast with fewer dropouts.”The system is also being rolled out on Deutsche Bahn services in Germany and on Brightline and Amtrak trains in the US.Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotion“We look forward to providing rail passengers with the same service we provide for Lando Norris and Lewis Hamilton,” Fry added.Part of the trial will be to track passenger behaviour to see how much satellite data would be required if free, fast wifi was available for streaming.The £300k cost is being funded by Peninsula Transport, a body combining Devon, Cornwall, Plymouth, Somerset and Torbay, with better connectivity seen as a critical investment for parts of England where mobile coverage is patchy.

Businesses have welcomed the trial.Andy Jasper, the chief executive of the Eden Project in Cornwall, said GWR trains were his “travelling office, and a bloodstream between Cornwall and London – new wifi is going to be the oxygen that keeps everything pumping”.Jasper said he was used to having to time conversations onboard for when he knew the wifi would work, such as a quick 10-minute Teams meeting in Plymouth.“Reliable wifi puts your mind at ease – it turns the journey into a prime opportunity to get things done.”
societySee all
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Stephen Dawson obituary

My friend Stephen Dawson, who has died of cancer aged 78, had the questionable luck of being a newly minted urologist when Aids first struck in London in the early 1980s.The son of Philip, a nuclear physicist at the Atomic Energy Research Establishment at Harwell, and May, a housewife, Steve was born in London, went to King Alfred’s school, Wantage, and studied medicine at University College Hospital before qualifying as a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians in the late 70s. The decade that followed was both clinically fascinating and emotionally challenging.Working in genitourinary clinics around London, Steve helped chart the rise of HIV-opportunistic diseases while being able to do little to treat them. It was typical of him that, in 1988, he left Aids medicine in London for the professionally less glamorous Slough, to work as the first consultant in genitourinary medicine in east Berkshire

about 10 hours ago
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Two-thirds of nurses in UK work while unwell, says union

Nurses across the UK are working while unwell in understaffed hospitals, with stress as the leading cause of illness, according to research.A survey by the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) of more than 20,000 nursing staff found that 66% had worked when they should have been on sick leave, up from 49% in 2017.Just under two-thirds (65%) of respondents cited stress to be the biggest cause of illness, up from 50% in 2017. Seven out of 10 said they had worked in excess of their contracted hours at least once a week, with about half (52%) doing so unpaid.The NHS has more than 25,000 nursing vacancies across England

about 22 hours ago
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‘I’d run down the road thinking I was God’: a day at the cannabis psychosis clinic

Katie hears voices and has been sectioned 50 times. Isiah became paranoid and tried to kill himself. Both link their illness to cannabis – and the drug is getting more and more potent. Is a tiny London clinic showing the way forward?It’s two years since Isiah found himself on the roof of a south London shopping centre, about to jump. “I was very done,” he says of that night in November 2023

1 day ago
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Hundreds of low-paid NHS hospital staff win improved terms after strike threat

Hundreds of low-paid NHS hospital workers are celebrating victory after bosses agreed to improve their terms and conditions following the threat of strike action.More than 330 workers, mainly cleaners, caterers and porters, known as facilities staff, at St George’s, Epsom and St Helier hospital group (GESH) – 98% of those balloted – voted for strike action.Cleaners, caterers and porters were brought in-house four years ago as NHS employees but were denied the same conditions as many other NHS workers, losing millions in pay and other entitlements over the years.The workers said they had been systematically excluded from the NHS’s Agenda for Change (AfC) terms and were prepared to strike unless GESH granted them full AfC contracts.Strike action was averted after a board vote on 6 November approved proposals to implement full AfC contracts

1 day ago
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Call for inquiry after families stripped of child benefit due to flawed travel data

Calls are being made for an urgent independent inquiry after thousands of families were stripped of child benefit due to flawed Home Office travel data that claimed to show parents going on holidays and not returning.Andrew Snowden, the Conservative MP for Fylde and the party’s assistant whip, said the government “must take immediate and transparent action” to address the failures of the anti-fraud benefits crackdown.“Thousands of families have had essential child benefit payments wrongly suspended because of unreliable or incomplete data,” he said.Snowden called for “a full, independent review of how this system was authorised, including how such unreliable travel data was used to make decisions on family benefits”. He said the findings must be published in full

1 day ago
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‘I was scared’: parents reveal stress of HMRC’s child benefit errors

Demands to pay back thousands of pounds in child benefit, claims of emigration after a serious case of sepsis and a complaints unit that is indifferent to the emotional impact of its errors.Here parents tell of their experiences of being caught up in the HMRC anti-fraud debacle.Tetiana fled the war in Ukraine in 2022 with some of her family including her brother, Roman, who is paraplegic, for whom she is now a full-time carer, and baby who was born in 2021.In October, she was shocked to receive a letter telling her she could be liable to pay back £3,706.35 in child benefit because she had “moved to Ukraine permanently”

1 day ago
foodSee all
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‘Simple, well-crafted and excellent’: supermarket chutneys, tasted and rated | The food filter

2 days ago
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It’s not all about roasting on an open fire – there’s so much more you can do with chestnuts

3 days ago
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Benjamina Ebuehi’s recipe for apple, brown butter and oat loaf | The sweet spot

4 days ago
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Kids have a wobble in the face of rabbit jelly | Brief letters

4 days ago
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Think autumn, think Piedmont – wine from ‘the foot of the mountain’

4 days ago
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‘I’m now a one-issue voter’: US shoppers fear Italian pasta tariff will cause shortage

4 days ago